| Location | Information | Concentration Camp | % Correct |
|---|---|---|---|
| Poland | Most famous and largest concentration camp | Auschwitz-Birkenau | 98%
|
| Germany | First camp opened in Germany for prominent academic, political, religious, and royal prisoners | Dachau | 68%
|
| Germany | Where Anne Frank died | Bergen-Belsen | 62%
|
| Poland | Secret concentration camp used in Operation Reinhardt | Treblinka | 60%
|
| Poland | Extermination camp, only a few Jews survived | Sobibor | 42%
|
| Germany | Held many political prisoners | Buchenwald | 33%
|
| Austria | Used as a camp for the intelligentsia prisoners | Mauthausen | 31%
|
| Poland | First extermination camp opened to kill Jews of Lodz Ghetto | Chelmno | 28%
|
| Poland | First extermination camp | Belzec | 26%
|
| Poland | Located near Lublin | Majdanek | 26%
|
| Germany | Largest female concentration camp | Ravensbruck | 25%
|
| Germany | Held prominent political prisoners including Joseph Stalin's oldest son | Sachsenhausen | 21%
|
| Czech Republic | Used by Nazis as propaganda to make others believe concentration camps were humane | Theresienstadt | 21%
|
| Poland | Last camp liberated by Soviets | Stutthof | 13%
|
| Netherlands | Used to send Italian and Dutch Jews east to killing centers | Westerbork | 13%
|
| Germany | Commanded by Amon Goth | Plaszow | 12%
|
| Germany | Housed surviving members of the Valkyrie conspiracy | Flossenburg | 10%
|
| Poland | In 1944 held 11% of all concentration camp inmates | Gross-Rosen | 10%
|
| France | Only camp in France | Natzweiler-Struthof | 9%
|
| Germany | Prisoners were used as forced laborers in several industries | Neuengamme | 9%
|
| Latvia | Held all Jewish prisoners in Latvia | Kaiserwald | 6%
|
| Germany | Provided workers for the V-2 rocket factory | Mittelbau-Dora | 6%
|
| Ukraine | Began as a factory in Lvov, Poland | Janowska | 4%
|